Douyin was punished by South Korea for collecting under-user data

 

Douyin was punished by South Korea for collecting under-user data:

Douyin was punished by South Korea for collecting underage user data.

Popular video-sharing application vibrato overseas edition of TikTok, settle US government allegations of illegal underage collect user information in the last year, The app violates South Korean laws in terms of privacy violations.

According to the Korea Yonhap News Agency, the Korea Communications Commission (Korea Communications Commission, abbreviated as KCC) announced on Wednesday (July 15) that TikTok was fined 186 million won (about US$154,000) because it is In violation of the Korea Telecom Law, data for users under 14 years of age were collected without parental consent.

South Korean regulators found that about 6,000 data from underage users were collected illegally. In addition, when TikTok did not notify the user correctly in advance, it transmitted the local user's data to servers in Singapore and the United States.

According to the Korea Yonhap News Agency, the Korea Communications Commission began investigating TikTok in October last year.

In February last year, TikTok paid a fine of $5.7 million to settle the U.S. government’s accusation of illegally collecting personal information of users under the age of 13, which violated the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (abbreviation) For COPPA).

TikTok application is called "in mainland China vibrato ", "byte beating" by a Beijing technology company (ByteDance) was launched in 2016. It is very popular abroad, with an estimated 800 million monthly active users worldwide. According to data reported by Korea Yonhap News Agency, as of December 2019, South Korea had 3.4 million TikTok users.

According to US market research company eMarketer, citing data provided by media analysis company Comscore, as of March this year, in the United States, TikTok had approximately 52.5 million unique visitors.

Despite paying huge fines in the United States, TikTok may still not fully comply with the settlement agreement it reached in 2019.

Reuters reported last week that the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) and the U.S. Department of Justice are investigating allegations filed by several American advocacy groups in May that TikTok continues to violate the Children’s Online Privacy Protection bill".

On May 14, the American advocacy group "Campaign for a Commercial-Free Childhood" (abbreviated as CCFC) and other members of the American Child Protection, Consumer and Privacy Group Coalition filed a lawsuit against the Federal Trade Commission. TikTok continues to violate the law, including the failure to delete the personal information of minor users obtained before the settlement.

In recent months, many US congressmen have expressed concern about TikTok. On May 21st, Republican MPs Greg Walden and Cathy McMorris Rodgers wrote a letter to Zhang Yiming, founder and CEO of "Byte Beat" , Asking him to answer 22 questions before June 5.

One of the questions is whether TikTok shared the information it collected about Americans with the Communist Party of China or any Chinese state-owned entity.

The CCP’s National Intelligence Law came into effect in 2017, allowing Beijing authorities to access all data stored in the country.

Last week, US Secretary of State Pompeo (Mike Pompeo), said Trump government "certainly consider" No TikTok. On Wednesday (July 15), after Trump's chief of staff, Mark Meadows commented, the White House hinted that a ban might be introduced soon.

Last month, the Indian government banned 59 mobile applications, most of them Chinese, and TikTok was one of them. According to a press release from the Indian government, these applications "are engaged in activities that undermine India's sovereignty and integrity, safeguard India, national security and public order."

 


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